UNICEF: Northern Elites Have Not Done Enough on Education
United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF), has said that some
obsolete cultural practices and religious misinterpretations has been
the reasons for poor access to education and increased poverty in
northern Nigeria.
The global body believed that political, traditional and community
leaders in the region need to put more effort to change the statistics
as regards number of children without education.
Executive Secretary of the Universal Basic Education Commission
(UBEC), Dr. Hamid Bobboyi, few weeks ago, revealed that number of
out-of-school children in Nigeria has increased from hitherto 10.5
million to 13.2 million.
However, UNICEF education specialist, Azuka Menkiti, confirmed to
journalists at a two day media dialogue in Kano, that 69 percent of
children without access education in Nigeria are found in streets of
northern Nigeria, with northeast states leading and northwest states
following.
She said: “Few weeks ago, we held a education conference in Kaduna
and it had impressed participation of traditional, community and
religious leaders.
“Stakeholders that participated in meeting signed a commitment to
join forces with government and global partners to pull children out of
street and return them to so as to secure a peaceful and productive
posterity.
“We don’t insist on formal education. It could be Koranic
education. But it will be more profitable if they combined both Koranic
and formal education. Records indicated that about 9.5 million school
age children in Nigeria are currently enrolled Koranic schools across
Nigeria but only 24 percent of them combine both formal and Koranic
education.”
Meanwhile, Head of Child Right Information Bureau (CRIB) in the
Federal Ministry of Information and Culture, Olumide Osayinpeju, said
the essence of the media dialogue was to draw attention to implications
of uneducated posterity.
He said: “Evidence exists that increased investment in education
and protection of the vulnerable citizens, in this case children, and
addressing inequality would ensure sustained growth and stability in
Nigeria.
“We heed to integrate children, especially those in difficult
terrain and other excluded children and ensure equitable distribution of
education resources.”
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